Greetings all!
This post comes shortly after the death of Margaret
Thatcher, the conservative leader of the United Kingdom during the 1980s. Her
rule was marked by a dissolution of British labor protections in favor of
privatization and large capitalist-driven growth. By the end of her rule,
stagnation and civil unrest marked her leadership, although she remains a
significant figure in British politics to this day. And while my fellows and I
may feel no remorse for our criticism of her, I do not rejoice in death. Even though
I’d love to embark on a full critique of Thatcherism, tonight I have reserved a
piece which I consider one of my best among my body of work here. Tonight, I
write on private prisons, and how the very nature of these institutions is
wrong and they should be abolished. This week’s quote is from David Hopper,
general secretary of the Durham Miner’s Association and a critic of Thatcher
whom I felt deserved a place for his voice.
Private prison operation is a mostly new phenomenon
in the United States. Like many other things wrong with America today, private
prisons began their expansion mostly during the 1980s. This was due to the effects
of the War on Drugs, in which our incarceration rates began to move up on the
scale to the point now where we have the world's
largest prison population. Due to increased arrests of a disproportionate
amount of racial minorities on minor drug-related offenses, towns and cities suddenly
had far more prisoners than public institutions were ready to hold. This was a
significant issue because drawing up money to build new prisons was difficult
seeing as Reagan had transferred much public money away in order to “grow” the
private sector. And so, private prisons stepped in, eventually becoming major
corporations such as the Corrections Corporation
of America.
I’ll take the liberty of linking my main source for
criticism of private prisons right now, this lengthy
article from PRWatch. My main, to put it lightly, quip with private prisons
is their legality within the framework of our Constitution. However, they also
exhibit several other areas where they fall short of reasoning for existence.
First and foremost, private prisons are often accused of prisoner abuse by
guards and other forms of poor treatment that is not seen as frequently in
public prisons. Not only are we taking away the freedoms of many people at a
time with private prisons, but we also violate their freedoms at the same time.
This is increasingly hypocritical when you realize just how many prisoners are
put away for minor drug-related crimes, such as marijuana possession. Whether
you believe marijuana should be legal or not, you cannot dispute that people
should be treated as people and not scum, even when in prison. If doing that
worked to improve societies, we would not have issues integrating ex-cons back
into society. Norway has easily
proven that rehabilitation is a far superior method towards that goal.
Private prisons, or rather the companies that run
them, have also been caught in conflicts of interest. They often hold some form
of murky, questionable political power or influence in the places they operate
most freely, like in the Arizona town referenced in the PRWatch article. And so
just like banks, the abuse public services and funds to fuel themselves while
also protecting themselves from the public. If this doesn't sound like a
corporatist government, I don’t know what does.
One of the worst parts of private prisons is the
very notion that they exist. Think about it in terms of a capitalist market. In
capitalism, all business is driven by the profit motive; businesses want to
make money somehow. The goal of prisons is to keep prisoners in an isolated
location and to ready them for a return to society, although rather in America
their goal is to punish offenders of the law. Private prisons therefore earn a
profit per each prisoner they hold. This is horrifying. These private prisons
are encouraged by our capitalist model to arrest more people and keep them in
prison for longer periods of time while using as little money as possible to
keep them alive in order to make money. This is perhaps the only thing more
abhorrent about the state of our economic model than the power which large
banks hold over us.
In closing, I’d like to bring up the fact that, in
essence, private prisons are unconstitutional. But why, you ask? There is
nothing saying that the state must provide for all prisons, after all. While
true, there is an amendment to the constitution which effectively outlaws the
activity of private prisons. I refer to the 13th Amendment,
which outlawed the practice of slavery in America. We have people being placed
in poor conditions and then forced to work (prison labor) while those keeping
them imprisoned (guards and corporate owners) make a profit. To simplify that,
unpaid and abused prisoners are being forced to work so owners can make a
profit. This, my friends, is slavery, clear as can be. Therefore, any and all
private prisons exist in blatant illegal opposition to the 13th
Amendment, and should be dissolved immediately.
That is all for this week, and I think I've proven
my point well. As always, I encourage feedback through the comments, my email
at zerospintop@live.com, my Facebook,
Twitter, Steam, DeviantArt, Tumblr, and Reddit accounts. Good night, and this
is KnoFear, signing off.
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